That dog died some time ago. Peter Beinart seems to realize that. Some of the 
others, not so much

https://www.jta.org/2026/01/07/united-states/peter-beinart-elliot-cosgrove-and-other-jewish-leaders-face-off-over-the-future-of-liberal-zionism

At a Manhattan synagogue, rabbis and thinkers lament that young American Jews 
are losing faith in a model that once linked support for Israel with democratic 
values.

By Andrew Silow-Carroll ( https://www.jta.org/author/andrew-silow-carroll ) 
January 7, 2026 3:18 pm

For decades, liberal Zionism served the American Jewish majority as the 
ideological bridge between democratic and Jewish values: Support for Israel was 
based in, and justified by, a commitment to Jewish self-determination anchored 
in democracy, and animated by the promise of peace with the Palestinians.

On Tuesday night in Manhattan, a group of prominent rabbis and Jewish thinkers 
gathered to ask whether that bridge is now collapsing.

The conversation, held at B’nai Jeshurun in the heart of the famously Jewish 
and historically liberal Upper West Side, centered on what panelists described 
as a profound crisis in liberal Zionism — accelerated by Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack 
on Israel and the devastating war in Gaza that followed, but rooted in decades 
of occupation, the rightward political drift in Israel and growing estrangement 
between American and Israeli Jews.

The panel brought together figures who have long wrestled publicly with 
Israel’s moral and political direction, albeit to different degrees: Rabbi Jill 
Jacobs, CEO of the rabbinic human rights organization T’ruah; Rabbi Elliot 
Cosgrove of Manhattan’s Park Avenue Synagogue; Peter Beinart, the writer and 
editor who lately has soured on the idea of a Jewish state in favor of a 
single, binational state of Arabs and Jews; and Esther Sperber, an 
Israeli-American architect and Orthodox activist critical of Israel’s shift to 
the right.

Representatives of the Zionist right were not invited to sit on the panel, said 
moderator Rabbi Irwin Kula, because “that’s [not] where the crisis is.”

“We are living through the collapse of a paradigm,” said Kula, describing a 
polarized Jewish community shaken by grief, fear of antisemitism, and, 
especially for liberal Zionists, despair that their vision of two states for 
two people will ever come about. Kula, who championed pluralism as the 
president of the Jewish organization CLAL, said the question was no longer how 
big the Jewish tent should be, but whether it had already been “shredded.”

Throughout the evening, Kula resisted turning the discussion into a debate over 
one state versus two states or competing historical narratives. Instead, he 
pressed panelists to articulate the fears and “nightmares” driving their 
positions — a strategy meant to surface “vulnerability” rather than certainty. 
For the most part, the audience — over 400 in the sanctuary, and another 882 
who registered online, according to the synagogue — held its applause and 
jeers, as Kula requested, lending the evening the hushed air of a memorial 
service.

Cosgrove framed his fears around internal Jewish fracture. Drawing on biblical 
imagery, he warned that American Jews were increasingly turning one another 
into enemies, and said that the role of pulpit rabbis like him is to make room 
in their congregations for disagreement.

“My primary fear, and that is my primary role right now, is that in a moment of 
time when the Jewish people don’t lack for external enemies, we are making 
internal enemies,” he said. “And I believe that the role of rabbinic leadership 
and all of leadership right now must be that we restrain ourselves from this 
need to call the other a ‘self-hating Jew’ or ‘self-hating Zionist,’ or 
whatever label you want to put on one side, and a colonial oppressor on the 
other side.”

Jacobs, whose organization has been outspoken in condemning Israeli policies in 
Gaza and the West Bank, said liberal Zionism’s credibility has been undermined 
by institutions that claim its mantle while abandoning their Jewish values.

For years, she said, major Jewish “legacy” organizations instructed American 
Jews that supporting Israel meant defending its government, ignoring occupation 
and silencing Palestinian voices. As Israel has moved further away from liberal 
democracy, that model has alienated young Jews, whose distancing from Israel 
was front of mind for a panel whose youngest members are in their 50s.

“You have a young generation who’s never known Israel without Netanyahu in the 
helm, or almost never known the possibility of peace for both Israelis and 
Palestinians,” Jacobs said.

“Unsurprisingly,” she continued, that generation “looks around and says, ‘Well, 
if you’re telling me that Zionism means defending occupation and defending 
illiberal democracy, I want no part of that.’”

Jacobs suggested that most American Jews remain deeply connected to Israel 
while opposing its current government and supporting a two-state solution — a 
position she described as underrepresented in communal leadership.

In March, a Pew Research survey found that about 46% of Jewish Americans ( 
https://www.pewresearch.org/2024/03/21/majority-in-u-s-say-israel-has-valid-reasons-for-fighting-fewer-say-the-same-about-hamas/?utm_source=chatgpt.com
 ) , or a plurality, said a two‑state solution is the best outcome. Polling by 
Pew and others ( 
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/04/02/how-us-jews-are-experiencing-the-israel-hamas-war/?utm_source=chatgpt.com
 ) also suggests that while a substantial share of young Jews still affirms the 
importance of Israel and the two‑state idea, they also tend to be less 
supportive of Israeli policy and more questioning of traditional Zionist 
approaches than older generations.

Sperber brought the crisis into the realm of family and faith. Speaking as an 
Israeli with relatives across the political spectrum, she described 
conversations that have become nearly impossible, even among her siblings in 
Israel who share religious language and deep attachment to the land.

She said her own activism as a founder of Smol Emuni, or the “faithful left,” ( 
https://share.google/osEVuiU9mMg6v6g4e ) grew out of alarm at what she called 
the celebration of power, vengeance and dehumanization in Israel discourse in 
her community of Orthodox and otherwise observant Jews. Their uncritical 
support of the current Israeli government and its hawkish policies is often 
justified, she said, through distorted readings of Jewish tradition.

“We hear a kind of admiration of power and vengeance and brutality that is 
using our Jewish tradition as its justification,” said Sperber. “People talking 
about the Palestinians as Amalek, a kind of mythical nation that is supposed to 
be destroyed.

“Our Judaism has been leached away from us, and we need to find a way to bring 
it back into a place that’s morally grounded in our Torah and in our kind of 
democratic and liberal” values, she continued.

What is needed, she argued, is not only broader inclusion but teshuvah — moral 
self-examination and repentance — a core Jewish response to catastrophe.

Beinart, a prominent journalist whose call for one state has placed him outside 
the liberal Zionist camp, described his own position as emerging from years of 
listening to Palestinians, including people in Gaza. He spoke of specific 
conversations that left him haunted by the scale of civilian suffering and 
fearful of being judged by future generations for silence or complicity.

“The most constructive role I could play is to nudge people a little bit to 
listen to Palestinians,” he said. Such conversations undermine assumptions 
about Palestinian intentions and force Jews to confront how “ethnonationalism 
in Israel-Palestine” contradicts their own ideals as Americans. The liberal 
Zionist promise — that one could affirm Jewish safety, democracy and equality 
simultaneously — has failed under the weight of reality, he suggested.

At the same time, Beinart — recently criticized by Zionists and supporters of 
the Israel boycott after his appearance at Tel Aviv University ( 
https://www.jta.org/2025/11/28/israel/after-drawing-bds-backlash-progressive-jewish-writer-peter-beinart-apologizes-for-speaking-at-tel-aviv-u
 ) — acknowledged the cost of rejecting the Zionist idea of exclusive Jewish 
sovereignty: estrangement from the observant Jewish communities he once felt at 
home in, and anxiety about what that alienation means for his children.

“My nightmare is that I will continue to lose those relationships because I 
can’t find a way to communicate effectively with people who profoundly disagree 
with the positions that I’ve taken that I do it out of love for our people and 
then other people,” said Beinart.

Indeed, Cosgrove suggested that Beinart’s views have become so toxic in many 
parts of the Jewish community that it was a risk for a prominent pulpit rabbi 
like him to share the stage. “I’m concerned, because this is a public forum, 
that me sitting here quietly would signal my assent with anything that’s being 
said here,” Cosgrove said at one point, earning scattered applause.

Cosgrove agreed with the notion that American Jews could learn from Palestinian 
voices, but also said that critics of Israel should speak with Israeli soldiers 
and others “risking life and limb to make sure the atrocities of Oct. 7 never 
happen again.”

Repeatedly, the conversation returned to American Jews’ relationship with 
Israeli Jews — and to the question of responsibility across distance and 
disagreement. Even panelists sharply critical of Israeli policy rejected the 
idea of disengagement.

“We can’t try to create a Jewish community that has nothing to do with half of 
the [world’s] Jews,” Jacobs said, referring to the young anti-Zionist Jews who 
are severing their relationship with Israel, home to more than 7 million Jews. 
At the same time, she urged American Jews to stop using Israel as a proxy for 
Jewish identity and invest more deeply in Jewish life at home.

By the evening’s end, no roadmap had emerged for saving liberal Zionism — or 
replacing it. Sperber suggested Jews like her have a responsibility to continue 
to bring their “moral convictions to your Jewish community and the very broken 
country that we live in,” even in the absence of political solutions.

“The challenge is on us, those who still believe that Israel is a vital and 
important place that we care [about] and love,” she said.


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